In 1546 Lawrence Crawford of
Kilbirnie founded a chaplainry at Drumry and endowed it with the “five pound
lands of Jordanhill”.Thomas Crawford,
the sixth son of Lawrence, was a celebrated soldier renowned for capturing Dumbarton
Castle in 1571.Thomas subsequently
acquired Jordanhill from Bartholemew Montgomerie, the chaplain of Drumry, in
1562.It is possible that he built the
original Jordanhill House.In the
early 1700’s, Lawrence’s descendant, another Lawrence Crawford, repaired the
old house and set out the Jordanhill estate with orchards and gardens.

In 1750 the Crawfords sold
Jordanhill to a notable Glasgow merchant, Alexander Houston (one of the
“Tobacco Lords”). However at the end of the century the firm of Alexander
Houston & Co. got into serious financial trouble as a result of their
business in slaves at a time when slavery was falling into disrepute in British
eyes, and forgetting that slaves unlike other commodities had to be fed and
maintained till they were sold.Jordanhill had to be sold in 1800 and it was bought by another Glasgow
merchant, Archibald Smith, of the firm of Smith & Leitch.

It is very difficult nowadays to
realise what Glasgow was like in 1780. The American War of Independence was not
yet over, and that war had destroyed the great tobacco trade on which the
expansion of the city had been based. The old town had clustered round two
centres - the cathedral, and the cross, and had begun to creep only slowly
west. The population which had been 17,000 in 1740 was 43,000 in 1780, and
doubled in the next twenty years, but even then Glasgow had developed little
beyond Jamaica Street though the Blythswood estate was being laid out on paper.
The Clyde was still a shallow stream, though the process of deepening and
straightening had begun.It flowed
through the pleasant wooded hills of Renfrewshire to Dumbarton and the Firth,
and Jordanhill was built on one of those hills, looking over the lovely
countryside to the spire of Renfrew Church two miles away.

Archibald Smith (1749 –
1821)The 1st Smith of Jordanhill

Archibald Smith was one
of a very extraordinary generation of entrepreneurs that Glasgow produced in
the latter part of the eighteenth century. He was the younger son of John Smith
the 2nd Laird of Craigend (Mugdock), and with his two older brothers
had gone out to Virginia and N. Carolina as traders in tobacco in the 1760s but
foreseeing the difficulties arising from the rise of nationalism in what is now
the U.S.A. had come home and turned their attention instead to trade with the
West Indies.In this they were
enormously successful and by 1800 all three were ready to retire from the
crowded ‘lands’ of the city to more luxurious living in the country. The eldest
brother rebuilt the family home at Craigend as a modest Georgian house, the
second son bought Craighead near Blantyre and Archibald bought the estate of
Jordanhill for the sum of £14,000 and at once set about enlarging and altering
the house to the tune of another £4,000. These sums were very considerable
indeed in the early nineteenth century and the resulting house was very much as
is seen in photographs of Jordanhill House.

Jordanhill House, east
facing frontage, demolished in 1961

The estate was not even at that time
wholly agricultural. There were coal mines on the north side, let to the
Knightswood Coal Co., who paid a royalty of 3 pence (about 1p) per cartload of
coal on approximately 14,000 cartloads per annum, but it appears . that the
mines were small and not very productiveHousehold accounts for the estate show that Jordanhill house alone used
198 cartloads of coal at 3/8d each in 1802.

One of the first expenses of
ownership for Archibald Smith was for gravelling the “footpath from Dumbarton Road
to Anniesland Toll by Balshagrie”. This is now Crow Road, and a very different
kind of thoroughfare today.

In 1809 the farm of Whiteinch was
added to the estate, but a small part of it and the old farmsteading were
re-sold at once to Mr. Oswald of Scotstoun.Jordanhill estate now consisted of four farms, Whiteinch, Windyedge,
Woodend and Anniesland, with a small amount of farmland in hand at the
house.In 1819 the north lodge was
built on what is now Anniesland Road

James Smith (1782 – 1866)The 2nd
Smith of Jordanhill

In 1821 Archibald Smith died and was
succeeded by his eldest son, James.He
was a very different man from his father.Like many another son of a busy father, he had early decided that
business was not for him.After some
years in the yeomanry during the Napleonic Wars, he married Mary Wilson the
daughter of a Glasgow bookseller and they lived in the old castle of Rosneath,
a property of the Duke of Argyll.He
was interested in many things - a man of the new century.He was one of the first yachtsmen on the
Clyde and as early as 1806 he had taken a party sailing up the West Coast of
Scotland in his cutter.He was a
passionate reader and collector of books, had travelled in Italy and brought
back fine pictures. He was one of the early geologists who were already
thinking in terms of the kind of time-scale of development which underlay the
startling theories of Darwin forty years later.

Among his
other interests James Smith had cultivated the art of architecture.In 1812 his cousin of Craigend had rebuilt
his father’s new house there to a plan provided by James, replacing the
sensible Georgian Box with a Gothic mini-castle.(The ruins still stand in
Mugdock Country Park).James’ sketch
books of that time show him to be much taken up with the notion of what could
be done with Jordanhill House including a dome and corner towers with pepper
pots. However by 1821 he had four children living and another on the way so
common sense prevailed and he contented himself with remodelling and
modernising the interior.In order to
give a point of reference to the view from his library window he designed and
erected the pillar which still survives.This pillar stands in the direct line of sight between that window and
the spire of Renfrew Parish Church with which he was closely connected.Shortly afterwards, the farm of Gartnavel
was added to the estate.

James
Smith could not, however, live without access to his much-loved boats and in
1827 he bought the Baths Hotel at Helensburgh (later known as Queen’s Hotel and
now redeveloped) as a seaside home. Although the Smiths owned it for the next
forty years, somehow the name was never changed and the family always referred
to it simply as ‘Baths’. Several months of each year were spent there, those of
the family who liked sailing loved every moment, and those who did not bemoaned
the cold and damp and longed for Jordanhill House.

For the
next twenty years Jordanhill has little history. The family grew in size -
there were seven daughters and one son.The son, Archibald, having passed through the High School by the time he
was fourteen, was sent south to school for a couple of years, then to the
University when he was sixteen. Having finished his degree in Glasgow with much
eclat and many prizes, he went on to Cambridge in 1832, where in 1836 he was
the first Scotsman to be Senior Wrangler, and became a Fellow of Trinity.James Smith himself was created an F.R.S.
in recognition of his work in geology.

In the
late thirties, things changed.Two
daughters, sent to school in London, contracted a virulent form of
tuberculosis. Their parents took them to Madeira in the hope that the climate
there would cure them, but one died there, and the other died in London on the
way home. A third daughter showed signs of infection.It was clear that drastic measures were needed so Jordanhill was
let for five years and the Smiths went to live in Portugal, Spain, Gibraltar
and then Malta in the search for health.

During
this period, the disruption in the Church of Scotland took place. James Smith
was an elder of the kirk at Renfrew and a keen and thoughful churchman.His wife was a devoted follower of Dr.
Chalmers.She has left a vivid
description of her husband in Spain trying to explain in very inadequate Spanish
to a Spanish priest who knew even less English the beauties, peculiarities and
difficulties of the Presbyterian system of church government.Had he been in Scotland his decision might
have been different, but looking at it from far away, free from emotional
pressures, he was quite sure that schism was a poor substitute for argument and
persuasion, and he remained with the established church though his wife would
have preferred to go with her friends.

In 1846
the family came back to Jordanhill, but in 1847 Mrs. Smith died of pneumonia.
James Smith lived for another twenty years.Money was less plentiful for James Smith than it had been, the West
Indian trade was steadily less profitable, there were daughters to be provided
for and housing conditions on the estate had deteriorated. The youngest
daughter Jane had become a passionate Episcopalian, but one with a social
sense. She asked her father for, and was given, first a site and money to build
a school, and then a church, and till her death in 1864 she gave herself to
good works in them. (see http://www.wsmclean.com/allsaints.htm)

During his
later years he published two books of note. One was’The Voyage and Shipwreck of
St. Paul’ in which he brought together his knowledge of sailing, of boats in
classical times and of the actual geography to elucidate the New Testament
story.His other book was ‘Newer
Pliocene and Post-Tertiary Geology’ published in 1862 when he was eightyHe died aged 85 in 1866.

Archibald
Smith (1813 – 1872)The 3rd
Smith of Jordanhill

Meantime
James’ son Archibald had chosen to become a chancery barrister in London, and
had married Susan Emma Parker, daughter of Sir James Parker, Vice-Chancellor, who
was also a Glasgow man. He pursuedtwo
careers: as a lawyer during the day, and in the evenings and during the
vacations, working on the problems of the deviation of the compass, a matter of
pressing importance with the invention of the iron ship. This work came to
fruition in 1862 and brought him much fame and the Gold Medal of the Royal
Society.

For Jordanhill itself these years were not very happy ones.
The coal mines were almost worked out.Ironstone workings had been opened by the Monkland Iron & Coal Co.
Archibald could do little to improve matters as his income was fully stretched
with seven sons and two daughters.In
1872 the Government awarded him a grant of £2,000 in recognition of his work on
the compass, and he devoted this money to replacing some of the appalling
houses at Jordanhill. These new buildings were known as Compass Cottages in
Anniesland Road (seehttp://www.wsmclean.com/shop.htm)

His
fatherJames had died in 1866 leaving the estate somewhat embarrassed.Archibald who inherited the estate died in
London six years later on Boxing Day 1872.It was said that his habit of working both by day and by night had worn
him out. He left his young widow to bring up their family of whom the eldest,
James Parker Smith, was 18 and the youngest only 4. Susan Emma, his widow,
decided that it was better sense to remain in her more modest house in Putney
within easy reach of her sons’ schools, and in fact she never herself lived at
Jordanhill.

Susan
Emma Parker Smith

Archibald’s
widow inherited the Jordanhill Estate on his death in 1872.It was she who feued off huge parts of the
estate for housing and her name appears in virtually every

title deed
for properties north of the railway line.She died in 1913.

The Smiths, 9 October 1904

Back left; Archibald Hamilton Parker Smth, the 5th
of Jordanhill.He had just celebrated
his 21st birthday.

James
Parker Smith had been a scholar of Winchester and became a Fellow of Trinity
and a barrister. He married a cousin, Mary Louisa, a daughter of William
Hamilton of Minard and devoted himself to politics. He became M.P. for Partick
and Joseph Chamberlain’s Parliamentary Private Secretary.Glasgow had now begun to spread fast.The Gartnavel part of Jordanhill Estate had
already been sold to provide land for the Royal Lunatic Asylum.Bricks and mortar began to swallow up the
Jordanhill estate at an ever-increasing rate until finally in 1911 an approach
was made to the owner for the mansion house of Jordanhill and the land
immediately round it for the establishment of a Training College for teachers.
In 1913 the sale was finalised and the direct association of the Smiths with
Jordanhill came to an end.

James
Parker Smith’s son who is referred to in Burke’s Landed Gentry as “5th
of Jordanhill” served with the Gordon Highlanders in World War One.He retired in 1920 and died, unmarried, at
his home in Australia.

C H G
Smith The 6th Smith of Jordanhill

In 1989 I
wrote to the 6th Smith of Jordanhill, Mr C H G Smith, who lived in
Australia and he replied with a most helpful and interesting letter.My main topic had been to find out what
happenend to the gold compass presented by the Tsar.

Mr Smith
explained that when his uncle, Archibald Parker Smith, died in 1971 he became
the 6th Smith of Jordanhill, to use his own words “for all that is
worth nowadays”.Because there were
no further male descendants of the Rt Hon James Parker Smith (the 4th
Smith)the succession ran down via the
Rev. Walter E Smith, the second son of Archibald Smith (the 2nd
Smith) through his eldest son Edward Archibald Smith, then to Edward’s eldest
son, Mr C H G Smith (the 6th Smith).

It is
interesting to note that the 2001 edition of “Burke’s Landed Gentry” states
“Archibald Colin Hamilton Smith died unmarried on 5 June 1971 when he was
succeeded in the family representation by his first cousin once removed”.This “bible” of landed gentry appears to
regard the 5th Smith as being the last of the landed gentry and does
not even name his successor.Certainly since the Smith family no longer has any land they can hardly
be regarded as landed gentry.

With
regard to the compass, Mr Smith explained that following the death of Archibald
Parker Smith,aninventory of his possessions was prepared
and offered for sale to the wider Smith Family.The compass was listed as follows:“Gold compass presented to Archibald Smith by the Tsar, having
hinged cover with border of pastes, the centre enamelled with Russian Imperial
crest on chased ground, plain back, with inscription (By F Boty of St
Petersburg)Value £50”

Neither Mr
Smith nor any of the family in Australia bought the compass so its present
whereabouts is unknown.It is
particularly interesting to note the above formal valuation which indicated
that whereas the story went that the compass was “surrounded in diamonds”,
these diamonds were in fact imitation (the technical term is “paste”).Even so, the estimated value of £50 seems a
bit low for an item made of gold, but these are the facts as presented to me.

The Smith
family papers dealing with the Jordanhill Estate and including huge quantities
of personal letters, documents and memorabilia are deposited in the Glasgow
City Archives in the Mitchell Library.

Many of
the earlier Smiths (including Jane who founded All Saints Church) are buried in
the graveyard surrounding Renfrew Parish Church which was the local parish
church for Jordanhill in the 1800’s.James Smith was an elder there.